Tuesday, 4 October 2016

What has happened to Bendish Marsh??

This is an important article about part of the Peninsula

What Has Happened to Bendish Marsh?

by Stewart Ash

Bendish Marsh
is the name that was given to a 4 acre field on the western Greenwich Peninsula,
inland from Enderby Wharf. Its name
probably came from the 17th century dyke and sluice of the same name
that feeds into the Thames alongside the steps and causeway at Enderby Wharf.

The first
known document recording ownership of land on the Greenwich Peninsula dates
back to 918 and sets out the gift of land known as Old Court Manor, to the Abbey of St Peter, in Ghent by Alfred the
Great’s youngest daughter, Ælfthryth (877-929).
This land comprised 276 acres and
included a large area on the Greenwich Peninsula,

Over the next
800 years this land was owned by various kings, queens, monasteries and
noblemen. In 1698, the land was Crown property and a lease for a large part of Old Court Manor was acquired by Sir John
Morden (1623-1708), from Margaret Boreman,the widow of Sir William Boreman (c.1617-1686),for £9,000. A year later, Sir John obtained the freehold of
this land from the Crown. On his death,
the land passed to his widow, Susan née Brand (1638-1721) and as they had no
issue, on her death the land came under the control of the ‘Trustees’ of Sir
John’s charity ‘Morden College’.

By the terms
of Sir John’s will, upon his death, seven ‘Trustees’ were to be chosen from the
Levant (Turkey) Company to administer the College (and its endowed estates),
and if this company should cease to exist, then they were to be selected from
the East India Company. Finally, if the
East India Company ceased to exist, then Trustees should be drawn from the
Court of Alderman of the City of London.
This stipulation meant that there were three distinct phases of Trustee
selection. From 1708 to 1826, Trustees
came from the Levant Company; from 1827 to 1884, they were selected from the
East India Company and, from 1885 to the present day,Trustees have been
selected from the City Aldermen, many of whom have been Lord Mayor of London. In recent years only past Lord Mayors of
London have been eligible for the position of Trustee. It was these Trustees who shaped the
development of the land that made up part of the Old Court Manor estate.
Their decisions have also influenced the way in which the Greenwich
Peninsula as a whole has developed over the last 300 years.

The first
known map showing Old Court Manor was
produced by Samuel Travers (1650-1725), Surveyor General of Crown lands,from a
survey conducted in 1695 of the Crown lands in Greenwich and on the
peninsula. A copy of Travers’ map is
held in the Morden College Archive; it shows all the Old Court Manor land as pasture and marshland, with the notable exception
of the Gunpowder Magazine, which stood on Crown land, at what is now Enderby
Wharf, from 1695 to 1769. This map does
not give names to the fields on the peninsula.

According to the
Modern College’s official history published in 1982, the first detailed survey
of the College lands of Old Court Manor was
carried out by the Trustees in 1721.
However, no record of this survey could be found in the College Archive.The
first survey map, held in the College Archive, is John Holmes’ survey of 1732.
This does identify the field names and Bendish Marsh is among them.

In 1960, W V
Bartlett statedin his essay ‘The River
and Marsh at East Greenwich’ that a plan dated 1734, described as ‘a particular of lands late of Sir William
Boreman’ does still exist. It shows
the layout of the fields on the peninsula with the following field names:
Balsopps Marsh, Bendish Marsh, Bishiop’s Marsh, Catt’s Brains, Crabtree
Croft, Dog Kennel Field, Foster’s Hole, Further Pitts, Goose Pool, Great
Meadow, Great Pitts, Hawk’s Marsh, Lady Marsh, Little Pitts, Peartree Meadow,
Pound Marsh, Pond Meadow, Short Bendish, The Pitts and Thistlecroft. A plan dated 1734 is not held in the College
Archive. However, many of the above field names can be found in Sir William
Boreman’s will. Therefore, the field
name of Bendish Marsh can be traced back to at least 1686. It is probable that the name dates back even
further to the early part of the 17th century when Bendish Sluice
was built as part of the major drainage system introduced to the marshes at
that time.

These fields,
can also be seen on Timothy Skynner’s plan, commissioned by the Greenwich Court
of Sewers and made in 1745, shown below.

Timothy Skynner’s Plan, 1745

Skynner’s
Plan shows the field boundaries and each plot, although not named, is given an
alphanumeric reference. The Plan also denotes
some areas as ‘Singles’ and others as ‘Doubles’. The field boundaries in most cases are
defined by the 17th century drainage system. The annual drainage rates levied by the Court
of Sewers on Doubles were twice those on Singles, e.g. in 1704, the rates were
12 shillings per acre and 6 shillings per acre respectively.

John Rocque’s Map of Greenwich, 1747

The first published map showing
the lands comprising Old Court Manor was
made by John (Jean) Rocque (c.1709-62).
He was the son of French Huguenot immigrant parents, who became a surveyor and
cartographer. Rocque is best known and
remembered for his detailed map of London.
He began work on this in 1737 and the map was published in 24 printed
sheets in 1747. The lands comprising Old Court Manor are shown on the sheet
above, in the top right corner, the Gunpowder Magazine can be seen but no field
names are included.

In 1771, the College Trustees commissioned
their surveyor, Michael Searles (1722-99), to conduct a further survey of the
land on the peninsula. A map of this
survey is also held in the College Archive and it identifies the field named Bendish
Marsh.

At the beginning of the 19thcentury
a rope works was established on the land where the Gunpowder Magazine had
stood. It is possible that Henry
Vansittart (1777-1843), who purchased the land from the Crown in 1802, was
the first person to permit the manufacture of hemp ropes on this site. In 1808, the rope works was in the hands of
James Littlewood but he became bankrupt in 1817, and the rope works was made
over to a Mr Young, who operated it until 1828.
Horwood’s map of London, dated 1819, is the first to show a ‘rope walk’
on the site. The ‘rope walk’ also
appears on the later Greenwood map of 1827.This ‘rope walk’ ran parallel to and
just behind the line of houses that now stand on the north side of Mauritius
Road. Since the 25th July
1815, Morden College had leased virtually all of its land to the north of the rope
manufactory, including the field known as Bendish Marsh, to John Field, a
Greenwich farmer.

In 1830, the rope manufactory was
purchased by Charles (1797-1876), George (1802-91) and Henry (1800-76) Enderby,
collectively Messrs Enderby Brothers. Over the next few years they invested a
great deal of money in developing it by adding a sail works and a hemp factory
to the already existing rope-making facilities.
A boiler house and steam engine were added to mechanise the ‘rope walk’
and drive looms. Until then, horses had
been used to provide the power to form and lay the ropes. Over the boiler room were hemp and spinning
rooms and in other factory buildings were joinery workshops and weaving looms. This facility became known as Enderby’s Hemp&
Rope Works;at its peak it covered some 14 acres (5.66 hectares) and employed
250 local people. During this period, the
river frontage acquired the name ‘Enderby Wharf’.The land known as Bendish Marsh
was not part of this property.

George Smith
(1782-1869) became the surveyor for Morden College in 1838. Immediately, the Trustees instructed him to
carry out a detailed survey and evaluate their land holdings on Greenwich Marsh
for industrial development. Whether this
initiative came about because the Trustees were then being drawn from the East
India Company and policies were changing, or perhaps the idea had been
stimulated by the success of the Enderby Hemp & Rope Works, combined with
the less successful leasing of their own land on the peninsula to Bryan and
Howden for industrial development, is unclear.
Bendish Marsh would have been part of this survey but unfortunately, the
maps and records of the survey could not be found in the College Archive. However, the lands that Smith surveyed are
marked in Red on the 1842 Tithe Map, shown
below.

The 1842 Tithe Map

In 1838, the Enderby
brothers acquired from Calvert Clark a small parcel of land on the riverfront
to the north of their Hemp & Rope Works.
This is shown on Simms’ 1838 map as 266a, as can be seen it contained a
square building,area 266a is described as a ‘cottage and gardens’.

Simms 1838 Map

In 1839, the
brothers tried to lease additional adjacent lands from Morden College. This land was Bendish Marsh, to the north of
the rope walk, to the east of plot 266 and the dyke shown on the Simms Map. However, obtaining a lease proved difficult,
as it appears that a licence was needed from the trustees if anything other than
a bleach house was to be built on the land.
As an alternative, the Enderbys offered to exchange some land already
owned by them for Bendish Marsh but this apparently required Parliamentary
approval, involving significant additional cost, and so negotiations broke
down.

On 8th
March 1845, the Enderby Hemp & Rope Works was destroyed by fire. No records have been found to indicate that
the factory ever reopened; however, the Kentish
Mercury of 13 September 1845 ran the following:

Liberality.—
On Saturday last the workmen in the employ of Messrs. Enderby took possession
of the new factory, which has been erected in place of the one burnt down some
few months since. In the evening a supper was prepared for a portion of them at
the Ship and Billet, Woolwich road; and also for another portion at the Star
and Garter, Park Street. The expenses were borne by Messrs. Enderby, who have
generously given all the persons who were thrown out of employment by the fire,
half their weekly wages since that period.”

This appears
to confirm that at least part of the factory was rebuilt but whether it
recommenced trading is less certain.

Charles
Enderby decided to build himself a dwelling house on the riverfront and work
commenced in June 1845. He approached
the Morden College Trustees again regarding the Bendish Marsh land and the minutes
the Trustees’ meeting of 29th October 1845 record that it was agreed
that Bendish Marsh could be leased to the Enderbys as ‘Bleaching Grounds’ but not for building. On the 13th November 1845, Charles
Enderby wrote to the Trustees of Morden College offering to take Bendish Marsh
on a 7 year lease.

Bendish Marsh

At that time Bendish
Marsh comprised 4 acres, 0 roods and 11 perches. It is shown in the plan above, along with
other Morden College land in Red. It is bounded to
the south and west by the Enderbys land (white) and to the east by Blackwall
Lane (then known as Ship and Billet Lane).
The light blue area is land belonging to Norfolk College and the puce land
was in the hands of the Calvert Clark family.

The building
of Charles Enderby’s house was completed in April 1846 when Charles took up
residence. He had wanted the Bendish Marsh
land to provide direct access to his new residence from Ship and Billet Land,
by-passing the rope works site. The lease,
that was to run until Michaelmas 1854, was executed on 24th December
1846 in the names of all three brothers and shortly afterwards,it was reported to
the Trustees that the Enderbys had culverted the dyke,running alongside Bendish
Marsh and had built a coach road to the new house.

Charles
Enderby lived in the house for three years, during which time he hosted several
dinners in the ‘Octagon Room’ for representatives of the Geographic Society, of
which he was a founder member, and the Royal Society, of which he had become a
fellow in 1841.

In August
1849, Charles Enderby set sail in the Samuel
Enderby for the Auckland Islands. He
would never return to the house. At that
time Messrs Enderby Brothers was in major financial difficulty. George Enderby wrote to the Trustees on 29th
October 1849 requesting that they take back the Bendish Marsh lease. The Trustees refused to do this but agreed to
try and find an alternative lessee. In
the meantime the lease was put in the hands of Messrs Lodge & Co,
solicitors. No new tenants were immediately forthcoming.

On the 22nd
July 1854, George Smith reported to the Trustees that the Enderby lease on
Bendish Marsh would expire at Michaelmas.
He begged permission to find an alternative tenant and on 14th
October a Mr John Smith was approved as a yearly tenant with 3 months’ notice.

In August
1855, William Coles Child (1814-73) approached the Trustees about leasing
Bendish Marsh. The Trustees offered him
a lease with 3 months’ notice at £42 per annum.
In early October, Coles Child turned down this offer as he had been
unable to acquire the adjacent Enderby property at a reasonable price. On the 8th October 1855, John
Smith gave notice to quit Bendish Marsh. Then on 26th January 1856, a
Mr McKenzie took up a year by year lease, on Bendish Marsh at an
annual rent of £10. This lower rent was
agreed due to the fact that Mr McKenzie already leasing other lands
from the College on the peninsula.

When Glass,
Elliot & Company purchased the Enderby property in 1857, no approach was
made to the Trustees concerning the adjacent Bendish Marsh land. However, on 7th April 1864, Glass,
Elliot became part of the Telegraph Construction and Maintenance Company
(Telcon) and on 4th May, Telcon secured a contract for the 1865
Atlantic Telegraph cable. On the 12th
May, Telcon’s solicitors wrote to the Trustees offering to take a long term
lease on Bendish Marsh. The lease was
finally executed on 6th April 1867.
It was for 4 acres, 0 roods and 8 perches, for a term of 80 years,
commencing in 1865 at a ground rent of £100 per annum. There were also a number of covenants
requiring Telcon to make significant capital investment in buildings and
infrastructure on the land.

On the 1893 Plan
of the Telcon site, the outline of Bendish Marsh can still be seen

Plan of the Telcon Factory 1893

The area of
Bendish Marsh is defined by a flooded dyke on the top half of the western side. On the northern edge to the western side it is
defined by a flooded dyke for just under half the length, then by a dry ditch
running south and then east to Ship and Billet Lane (Blackwall Lane). The southern edge is roughly along the line
of the rope walk and associated buildings.
The southern and lower western boundaries are shown on the plan by a broken
line ‘- ____ - ___’.
The 1907 plan of the site is very similar in this area and includes the
same ‘boundary line’ denoting the southern and lower western edge of Bendish
Marsh.The 1958 site plan and the 1970 plan, drawn up at the time of the STC
takeover of Submarine Cables Ltd, both have thisbroken line ‘- ____ -
___’, showing the boundaries of the Bendish Marsh land.

The Telcon
lease of Bendish Marsh was due for renewal in 1945, but there are no records in
the College Archive to indicate that it was renewed at any time up to the
present day or that the land was sold to Telcon. However, in 2003, just prior to selling the
river frontage, Alcatel-Lucent Submarine Networks (ASN), commissioned a land
registry search into the ownership of the site lands. The author is grateful to ASN for allowing
access to this report.

The report
indicates that Telcon acquired the small parcel of land owned by Norfolk
College, at a time when the rest of the property was held under a single title
276267. On the 7th April
1928, Bendish Marsh and the Norfolk College land were separated from the main
holding under a separate title 354883. Then,
on the 16th April 1928, title 354883 was subdivided into Bendish Marsh;
title TGL94231 and the Norfolk College land; title TLG12330. Why Telcon should have done this is
unclear. It may have had something to do
with possible sale of land due to the impact of the ‘Great Depression’ on
business,or perhaps separating the land into parcels was done to align them with the
different business units that would appear on the site during the 1930s. In 1935, Siemens Brothers and Telcon merged
their submarine cable interests as Submarine Cables Ltd (SCL). The submarine cable manufacturing facilities
of SCL were then centred on the title 276267 land.

The above
indicates that Telcon had possession of the freehold of Bendish Marsh prior to
1928. While no records have been found
to date to show when this purchase occurred the most likely explanation is that
it happened about the same time that Telcon gave up its lease on Morden
Wharf. Telcon’s predecessor W Küper& Co first came to
Greenwich in 1851 taking up an underlease from Charles Holcombe (1792-1870),
the primary lease holder of Morden College land, at what Holcombe named Morden
Wharf. In 1854, W Küper& Co became Glass, Elliot
& Co and when that company secured the first Atlantic Telegraph contract it
need more space, so Glass, Elliot acquired the derelict Enderby Hemp & Rope
Works in 1857. For the next 38 years both sites were utilised, but according to
‘The Telcon Story’ published in 1950,
Telcon gave up the lease of Morden Wharf and consolidated its manufacturing
facilities on the Enderby Wharf site in 1895.
It seems likely that at that time, Telcon could have arranged to
acquire from Morden College, the freehold of this 4 acres that was right in the
heart of its factory site.

On 28th August
1944, the plot of land on which 2 Mauritius Road stood was registered by SCL
under title SGL191335. The house was
demolished to widen the main gateway to the site at the end of Christchurch
Way. From that date onward the numbering
of the houses on the north side of Mauritius Road starts at No. 4. On 8th December 1961, the freehold
of the south east corner of the main site, title 276267, was sold under title
LN215230. This is the land on which the
Meantime Brewery now stands.

In 1970
Standard Telephones & Cables Ltd (STC) acquired SCL and on 4th
June 1974, STC obtained title absolute on the four parcels of land 276267, TLG12320,
TLG94231 (Bendish Marsh) and SGL191335, which made up the Enderby Wharf site. When Alcatel purchased STC Submarine Systems
in 1996 these four parcels of land came under its control. From 2004 ASN began the process of
consolidating and upgrading its manufacturing facilities; this process involved
reducing the size of the site. In 2008,
the river frontage was sold to West Properties; this included a small part of
the western side of Bendish Marsh. West
Properties went into administration and it wasn’t until 2013 that Morgan
Stanley acquired West’s assets and appointed Barratt to develop the site. This reduced ASN’s land ownership to 5 acres
and in 2014 a further 2 acres were sold to the Cathedral Group (now U + I plc),
this included title SGL191335, a part of Bendish Marsh
and small part of title 276267 . U+I
plc, in partnership with Weston Homes, is undertaking the ‘Telegraph Works’
development on this land.

The land that was once Bendish
Marsh has now been divided between the Barratt Enderby Wharf development, the U
+ I Telegraph Works development and the ASN factory. The new road ‘Telcon Way’, owned by ASN,runs
across the northern part of the western end of Bendish Marsh. It is very likely that Telcon Way follows a
similar path to the coach road built by Charles Enderby in 1846.